May 29, 2014

We shall pass on the track, we shall pass on the grass, we shall never surrender!

4 comments:


Like a pack of rabid Jack Russells these Minis give Mustangs and Galaxies no quarter.

Yes, the big Yank Tanks have the advantage in the straights but come the tight stuff at Silverstone and the tiny wonders mug  them on the inside,  the outside, on the grass if needed.

Brakes?  They don't need no stink in' brakes,  Brakes only slow you down!

You are riding with Endaf Owens in his Mini MkI at the Silverstone Classic Masters 2013.   Clearly, Mr Owens is well aware of "the proper way to drive a Mini".

(with apologies to Sir Winstron, via MotosportRetro.com)

May 26, 2014

Big Bentley wins at Silverstone!

1 comment:

Second race and first win for what must be one of the most unlikely race cars ever, the big Bentley Continental GT3.

The M-Sport prepared bruiser, driven by Guy Smith, Steven Kane and Andy Mayrick went head to head with the Mclaren 12c GT3 and beat it straight up on speed.   Very impressive.




Rosberg wins the mental game in Monaco.

18 comments:
Nico Rosberg (photo: Mercedes AMG F1)

Not really much in the way of highlights on track in Monaco, the real battle was the mental one.

More than just staying in front, what Rosberg was able to do was turn Hamilton mind games against him.

For all his undoubted talent, Hamilton has a fatal flaw: he often misses the opportunity to keep quiet.   So, despite his advantage coming into the race in Monaco, he had felt the need to more or less knock Rosberg in the media: how he should dominate Nico.  How Nico was born privileged among yachts and hotels while he was born poor and had to sleep on couches  (never mind his having a motorsports career nurtured by Ron Dennis since age 12).

Rosberg made his jujitsu move Saturday and Hamilton began to unravel, culminating in that veiled threat  to pull "a Senna" on Rosberg.

In reality Rosberg had the measure of Hamilton all week end, Lewis was never faster and ended up losing his cool during the race, blaming the team for not bringing him in just before the second safety car.   Later in the race Lewis continued to exchange tense messages with his pit.   Finally that bizarre episode with something hitting him in the eye.   After the race, the two did not exchange any words or shake hands.

It's not inconceivable that soon we will hear accusations Mercedes is favoring Rosberg because he's German but curious Hamilton was the first to break ranks by using extra power to stay ahead of Nico in Spain.

Kimi Raikkonen (Photo: Ferrari)
If Monaco was a Rosberg track, Montreal has been a Hamilton track so it should be interesting there in two weeks, we'll see if Lewis will just shut up and drive or if he will feel the need to have at Rosberg in the press again.   But most of all let's hope the other teams catch up so will not have to hear these two complaining about each other all season.


As for the rest, a real shame Raikkonen's race got destroyed by Max Chilton who somehow managed to run into him during the second safety car, puncturing a tire on the Ferrari.

If Chilton was the pits, Jules Bianchi was the star managing to finish eighth and giving Marussia their first points.

Not a good race for Renault power with Vettel out early and trouble at Toro Rosso and Lotus... though one might suspect Lotus faked a failure on Maldonado's car as a preemptive cost saving measure.




May 24, 2014

Monaco GP qualifying: Stay hungry.

35 comments:

In the end, qualifying for the Monaco GP came down to these 10 seconds.  

On the final run Rosberg is long at Mirabeau and has to take to the escape road.   Yellows come out and Hamilton cannot, by the rules, better his time through the whole of sector 2, the one that had been his best.

Hamilton is not happy.

Very happy are all the conspiracionistas of broadcast and internet.  It took exactly 24 seconds for someone to trot out Schumacher in 2006 and accuse Rosberg of a low blow.

Hey, maybe it was he who was hungrier after all.

Stewards are investigating

UPDATE: Rosberg's pole stands and Hamilton threatened to pull a Senna!

"I don't know if Senna and Prost talked about it but I quite liked the way Senna dealt with that so I'll take a page out of his book," Hamilton has said to Jennie Gow of BBC 5Live




Pos Driver                Team                  Time       Gap    
 1. Nico Rosberg          Mercedes              1m15.989s         
 2. Lewis Hamilton        Mercedes              1m16.048s  +0.059s
 3. Daniel Ricciardo      Red Bull-Renault      1m16.384s  +0.395s
 4. Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault      1m16.547s  +0.558s
 5. Fernando Alonso       Ferrari               1m16.686s  +0.697s
 6. Kimi Raikkonen        Ferrari               1m17.389s  +1.400s
 7. Jean-Eric Vergne      Toro Rosso-Renault    1m17.540s  +1.551s
 8. Kevin Magnussen       McLaren-Mercedes      1m17.555s  +1.566s
 9. Daniil Kvyat          Toro Rosso-Renault    1m18.090s  +2.101s
10. Sergio Perez          Force India-Mercedes  1m18.327s  +2.338s
                          Q3 cut-off time:      1m17.755s  **     
11. Nico Hulkenberg       Force India-Mercedes  1m17.846s  +1.492s
12. Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes      1m17.988s  +1.634s
13. Valtteri Bottas       Williams-Renault      1m18.082s  +1.728s
14. Romain Grosjean       Lotus-Renault         1m18.196s  +1.842s
15. Pastor Maldonado      Lotus-Renault         1m18.356s  +2.002s
16. Felipe Massa          Williams-Renault                        
                          Q2 cut-off time:      1m18.616s*        
17. Esteban Gutierrez     Sauber-Ferrari        1m18.741s  +1.184s
18. Adrian Sutil          Sauber-Ferrari        1m18.745s  +1.188s
19. Jules Bianchi         Marussia-Cosworth     1m19.332s  +1.775s
20. Max Chilton           Marussia-Cosworth     1m19.928s  +2.371s
21. Kamui Kobayashi       Caterham-Renault      1m20.133s  +2.576s
22. Marcus Ericsson       Caterham-Renault      1m21.732s  +4.175s
                                                                  
107 per cent time: 1m22.985s                                      
* Gap to fastest in Q1                                            
** Gap to fastest in Q2          

May 23, 2014

That year when almost nobody finished the Monaco GP

1 comment:
The Times

1982 was an odd year in F1,  Turbos were making their presence felt but the technology of the day was ground effect.

Cars had very short noses and long side pods.   One look at cars like the Renault RE30B or the Brabham BT49 and you can see the folly of putting a good portion of the driver's body ahead of the front axle.  Crazy and deadly.

The other requirement of ground effect cassis were incredibly stiff suspensions to keep the ride height as constant as possible.    In a bumpy and damp situation like developed in Monaco that year, those cars must have been close to un-drivable.

Towards the end of the race as rain began to fall, it was one leader after another falling victim of either evil handling or fuel consumption:  Arnoux, Prost, Pironi, de Cesaris, Daly.  Of the twenty starters only five crossed the finish line.

James Hunt commenting for the BBC at one point says:
"we've got this ridiculous situation where we're all sitting by the start-finish line waiting for a winner to come past and we don't seem to be getting one!"

The eventual winner was Riccardo Patrese in a Brabham, second was Pironi in the out of gas Ferrari and third deCesaris in the out of gas Alfa Romeo.

Not one of the best days for F1.




GP2 traffic jam in Monaco.

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It would not be GP2 in Monaco without some sort of Maldonado inspired shenanigans....yup, pretty much the entire field got stuck at the hairpin.

Also, I wonder if any of the F1 boys will try Stefano Coletti's move to pass where nobody expected. The move between Rascasse and Noghes worked twice, brilliantly for Coletti putting him up to second place...but then his luck ran out.



Pos  Driver               Team                    Time/Gap
 1.  Jolyon Palmer        DAMS                1h38m31.193s
 2.  Mitch Evans          Russian Time             +0.427s
 3.  Felipe Nasr          Carlin                   +0.653s
 4.  Johnny Cecotto Jr    Trident                  +2.175s
 5.  Sergio Canamasas     Trident                  +2.884s
 6.  Arthur Pic           Campos                   +6.187s
 7.  Rio Haryanto         Caterham                 +8.718s
 8.  Stephane Richelmi    DAMS                     +9.594s
 9.  Adrian Quaife-Hobbs  Rapax                    +9.785s
10.  Tio Ellinas          MP                      +10.187s
11.  Daniel de Jong       MP                      +10.689s
12.  Raffaele Marciello   Racing Engineering      +11.727s
13.  Conor Daly           Lazarus                 +12.291s
14.  Stoffel Vandoorne    ART                     +12.705s
15.  Kimiya Sato          Campos                  +26.761s
16.  Alexander Rossi      Caterham                +29.166s
17.  Nathanael Berthon    Lazarus                 +56.107s

Retirements:

     Artem Markelov       Russian Time             35 laps
     Rene Binder          Arden                    35 laps
     Simon Trummer        Rapax                    31 laps
     Stefano Coletti      Racing Engineering       31 laps
     Takuya Izawa         ART                      31 laps
     Julian Leal          Carlin                   24 laps
     Andre Negrao         Arden                    11 laps
     Daniel Abt           Hilmer                    9 laps
     Facu Regalia         Hilmer                    0 laps

May 22, 2014

Qualifying roulette.

3 comments:

Fascinating about Monaco how qualifying can depend so much on chance,   say Lewis "I slept on my dad's couch in Stevenage" Hamilton and Nico "Grew up with jets and hotels" Rosberg can't find a good gap, and they really could be off the front row.  

Today, on a drying track in the second qualifying session,  it happened and it was Ferrari not Mercedes on top and by a healthy 4/10th.  

Of course the one that counts is Saturday and, unfortunately for the spectacle, there is no more rain predicted for qualifying or the race.  

Maybe Maldonado will stuff it at a crucial moment and keep the Mercs from starting first!


Pos Driver                Team                     Time        Gap    Laps
 1. Fernando Alonso       Ferrari                  1m18.482s           15
 2. Lewis Hamilton        Mercedes                 1m18.901s  +0.419s  12
 3. Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault         1m19.017s  +0.535s  15
 4. Jean-Eric Vergne      Toro Rosso-Renault       1m19.351s  +0.869s  14
 5. Valtteri Bottas       Williams-Mercedes        1m19.421s  +0.939s   9
 6. Sergio Perez          Force India-Mercedes     1m19.668s  +1.186s   9
 7. Nico Hulkenberg       Force India-Mercedes     1m19.712s  +1.230s  10
 8. Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes         1m19.721s  +1.239s  16
 9. Daniel Ricciardo      Red Bull-Renault         1m19.779s  +1.297s  11
10. Kevin Magnussen       McLaren-Mercedes         1m20.230s  +1.748s  16
11. Felipe Massa          Williams-Mercedes        1m20.394s  +1.912s   8
12. Daniil Kvyat          Toro Rosso-Renault       1m20.622s  +2.140s  13
13. Adrian Sutil          Sauber-Ferrari           1m20.811s  +2.329s   8
14. Pastor Maldonado      Lotus-Renault            1m20.977s  +2.495s   7
15. Esteban Gutierrez     Sauber-Ferrari           1m21.467s  +2.985s   8
16. Romain Grosjean       Lotus-Renault            1m21.700s  +3.218s   6
17. Kamui Kobayashi       Caterham-Renault         1m21.924s  +3.442s   6
18. Jules Bianchi         Marussia-Ferrari         1m21.937s  +3.455s  13
19. Max Chilton           Marussia-Ferrari         1m22.683s  +4.201s  13
20. Nico Rosberg          Mercedes                 1m22.862s  +4.380s  11
21. Marcus Ericsson       Caterham-Renault         1m23.164s  +4.682s   6
22. Kimi Raikkonen        Ferrari                  1m45.509s  +27.027s  4

Monaco off to a quiet start.

No comments:
Abdalraouf Gando/Flickr


Few surprises after the first practice session in Monaco.  Hamilton just 3/100th ahead of Rosberg with Daniel Ricciardo in third by 2/10th,  encouraging for Red Bull.
Alonso is ahead of Vettel,  both are within 7/10th of the Mercedes which is what passes for good these days.

There has been a bit of a dustup with Alonso.  Some corners of the racing media interpreted his stated frustration with a "lack of support from some friends" as referring to Ferrari and foreshadowing a move to Mercedes. Others say what he was referring to were some in the Spanish press who had been critical of him.   For their part Ferrari felt the need to put out a statement from Luca di Montezemolo praising Alonso more than Mercedes bosses have in recent weeks.
Alonso has a contract with Ferrari though 2016 but it's not known if it includes any performance clauses.  Mind games.



Pos Driver                Team                     Time      Gap      Laps
 1. Lewis Hamilton        Mercedes                 1m18.271s           32
 2. Nico Rosberg          Mercedes                 1m18.303s  +0.032s  31
 3. Daniel Ricciardo      Red Bull-Renault         1m18.506s  +0.235s  37
 4. Fernando Alonso       Ferrari                  1m18.930s  +0.659s  31
 5. Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault         1m19.043s  +0.772s  33
 6. Kimi Raikkonen        Ferrari                  1m19.467s  +1.196s  31
 7. Valtteri Bottas       Williams-Mercedes        1m19.494s  +1.223s  31
 8. Sergio Perez          Force India-Mercedes     1m19.666s  +1.395s  29
 9. Kevin Magnussen       McLaren-Mercedes         1m19.789s  +1.518s  29
10. Nico Hulkenberg       Force India-Mercedes     1m19.856s  +1.585s  38
11. Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes         1m20.033s  +1.762s  35
12. Esteban Gutierrez     Sauber-Ferrari           1m20.118s  +1.847s  33
13. Romain Grosjean       Lotus-Renault            1m20.207s  +1.936s  33
14. Pastor Maldonado      Lotus-Renault            1m20.241s  +1.970s  38
15. Jean-Eric Vergne      Toro Rosso-Renault       1m20.260s  +1.989s  36
16. Felipe Massa          Williams-Mercedes        1m20.517s  +2.246s  25
17. Adrian Sutil          Sauber-Ferrari           1m20.736s  +2.465s  18
18. Daniil Kvyat          Toro Rosso-Renault       1m20.914s  +2.643s  37
19. Jules Bianchi         Marussia-Ferrari         1m21.310s  +3.039s  27
20. Marcus Ericsson       Caterham-Renault         1m22.063s  +3.792s  40
21. Kamui Kobayashi       Caterham-Renault         1m22.492s  +4.221s  38
22. Max Chilton           Marussia-Ferrari         1m25.817s  +7.546s   7

Live from #Renault : we are in #Monaco for the #GP2 test drives.

May 19, 2014

Brabhams in Monaco

2 comments:

There were quite a few Brabhams at the 9th Monaco Historic Grand Prix earlier this month,  I took pictures of a few of them.

        

Check your studs, avoid code brown.

3 comments:

The scariest part for our friend Andrea Sapino was not losing the left front turning into one of the fastest turns at the Nürburgring, nor was it hitting the barrier at a buck and change.  The scariest part had to be watching  the whole field dodge him in a blind turn, head on.  

Code brown.

Unhappy Racer


VLN is much more like American club racing than people perhaps realize and Andrea, who has been managing his own car's build and maintenance,  admits that while he replaced almost everything else on it,  he did not know wheel studs need to be replaced ever season.

Hard lesson to learn but at least there were no injuries, except to the underwear, possibly.
The car can be rebuild...because race-car,  but have you replaced your studs recently?


Black Jack Brabham

3 comments:

The great Jack Brabham, three times F1 World Champion in 1958, 60 and 66, passed away aged 88.

A giant of the sport, Brabham was the only man to ever win a Formula One championship in a car he built himself.
Nicknamed "Black" Jack, as much for his rough character as for jet black hair,  was also first to win a Formula One championship in a rear engined car in '59 with a Cooper.

Brabham BT33 in Monaco Photo AC/Axis of Oversteer
Brabham retired from F1 in 1970, aged 44 and sold his team to a young upstart, one Bernard Ecclestone.

His cars live on in Historic racing where they continue to fight for wins in the hands of great drivers like Duncan Dayton.

Spend 20 minutes remembering the great Brabham with this Legends of F1 piece from SkyF1.  Well worth your time.

Cheers Jack!



May 15, 2014

The Motorsport Safety Foundation: improving safety in tribute to Sean Edwards.

1 comment:

Safety is not sexy.  Titans of the sport, like Jacky Ickx are infamously quoted saying too much safety takes away from the challenge of motorsport.  Unfortunately, this attitude lingers among fans and drivers to this day.

But the challenge of motorsport is cheating physics, not cheating death.

There have been accidents  pivotal in changing both the public and the governing bodies attitude towards safety standards:  the Imola week end of 1994 for Formula One,  the death of Dale Earnhardt for NASCAR in 2001.  Much work was done with great success at the very top of the sport,  safety improved tremendously in the years since.   But there is still so much to be done.

2011, Dan Wheldon was killed in an accident whose circumstances were widely predicted.  In 2013 we lost first Allan Simonsen at Le Mans and later in the year, Sean Edwards during a private coaching session in Australia.

These fatalities were due to in part to complacency and bad circuit safety design.  Simonsen's car impacted a tree inches away from a single guard rail on the outside of Tetre Rouge,  Shocking to think that in 2013, at arguably the world's most famous circuit, this could have happened.

But it was the death of Sean Edwards that really touched and shocked so many in the Motorsport community and hit home for so many who do coaching at any level, from pro to track day.  It seemed so banal,  a passenger in a car that went off and hit a less than optimal tire barrier.  There are so many tracks where safety is less than optimal.

The loss of Sean was also shocking because he was so active online,  He was aways on Twitter, on instagram, on iRacing, he loved to share and we loved to peek at his growing career.

In 2013 he was racing in North America with Momo/NGT,  the same team that looked after Carlos' Axis GT3 cup,  where he partnered with team boss Henrique Cisneros.
It makes perfect sense that, as a tribute, Henrique started the Motorsport Safety Foundation, an organization which seeks to identify safety issues and solutions, in part through an online forum.

Cisneros discussed the goals of the Foundation and his memories of Edwards with Axis.  I encourage you to leave thoughts and comment about the subject here but, especially, to join the discussion on the Motorsport Safety Foundation's forums or Facebook page.



Axis of Oversteer: You started the Motorsport Safety Foundation in memory of your teammate and friend Sean Edwards. Tell us a bit about Sean and what the goals of the Foundation are.

Henrique Cisneros:  Sean was one of those drivers that simply extracted performance from a car in a way that would leave other pro drivers with their mouths open. He was an amazing talent to watch and truly a Porsche specialist.
He was also an amazing friend and mentor not just to me but to so many drivers around the world. He had a passion for coaching and was always trying to pass on his knowledge to others. It was always easier said than done because overlaying your lap data over his was always a humbling experience and it would knock any cockiness out of you instantly!
Unfortunately, Sean left us all too soon doing what he loved best. He died in a tragic accident coaching from the passenger seat at a Queensland Australia racetrack. Although there were several factors that lead to his passing, ultimately the main reason for his death was a sub-standard safety barrier that could not properly dissipate the energy of the crash. After his death, we formed the Motorsport Safety Foundation in his memory with the simple mission to improve track safety standards. We are focused on fixing simple issues that can prevent another driver, crew, marshal or even fan from serious injury or death.


A.o.O.:  Racecar safety has been in the news, especially with it being the 20th anniversary of the 1994 Italian GP at Imola. That horrible week end prompted the largest rethink of safety in a generation, but safety is not just for the very top of the motorsport ladder is it?

H.C.:   Well, the biggest issue in motorsport is that safety is mostly only present at the top. As you descend down each rung of the ladder, safety standards and codes quickly disappear and there is no oversight. In fact, as a simple example, most tracks in the United States do not require the use of a Head and Neck restraint system. Some sanctioning bodies do require them for races but at unsanctioned events, you can drive the same track without any safety gear on. National minimum safety codes do not exist for insurance purposes and tracks can operate without any barriers if they wish.
However, the blame is not on the track operators or sanctioning bodies but on the lack of safety education of the drivers themselves. As long as the drivers keep driving without proper fire resistant accessories and restraints, tracks do not have an incentive to improve as well. Drivers are not really aware of how safety barriers work and what should be the minimum necessary at any given corner so they can’t demand an upgrade if they do not understand how the current barrier is insufficient.
We do not have a safety rating system for tracks so we can’t make an informed decision of whether you will be safe or risking your life when you drive at a track. We don’t know what level of fire suppression they have, how many safety workers per mile, what the medical facilities are like or the distance to the nearest trauma center. These are all factors that should influence our decision to race at a track but this information is not available and actually not disclosed for liability purposes.
The biggest hurdle we have as a Foundation is getting past the legal liabilities that tracks have to manage which many times can paralyze safety upgrades.

A.o.O.:  But still, we see amazing shunts and drivers always seem to walk away unharmed, are we getting complacent?

H.C.:  It is my personal opinion that safety standards are excellent at all top level racing. The new cars are engineered very well, the top FIA rated race tracks have been designed to the latest technology and best practices so we do see some amazing accidents where people simply unbuckle themselves after rolling several times and they walk away. However, what we fail to see is the majority of the races which are not televised.
These are cars that are many times modified by the drivers themselves racing at tracks which simply can’t afford to spend the funds necessary to really catch up to today’s top standards. Safety barrier costs can be as much as $1,000 per foot of barrier.
Because of this fact, we have started an initiative called Adopt a Corner where we aim to help racetracks at raising the funds necessary to upgrade their safety barriers. Through crowdfunding platforms and corporate donations, we try to raise the funds needed in exchange for giving the corporate donors the advertising space on the new barriers and race track billboards for an extended period of time.

Its important to separate track safety and car safety as well. New cars are improving every year, equipment is improving every year. However, the adoption of the new technologies is what is taking a bit longer. It is proven that lighter carbon helmets coupled with a head restraint reduces the probability of neck injury but drivers still make the conscious decision to buy a heavier and cheaper helmet and not wear a restraint yet spend 5 times more on a set of tires that will only last a day.
In the US, buckling your seat belt is the law because its proven that it saves lives yet tickets are still issued every day over it. Maybe the solution has to be stricter rules imposed by insurance companies that mandate drivers to have a minimum standard. Just like we have to sign waivers or we can’t race, we need to take it further and have mandatory equipment checks as part of the waivers. The waivers need to be signed by the driver and the scrutineer.
Whatever the changes, they need to be pushed for from many sides.


A.o.O.:  The foundation is actively looking to give a platform to those directly involved in the sport, drivers especially, to voice their concerns… but who is you interlocutor on the regulatory and implementation side?

H.C.:  The website has a forum where many of these issues are discussed and debated in an open and transparent manner. Many times, the solutions can be found right on the forum. If someone contacts us asking for help on a matter that is more complicated in nature or requires the coordination with other organizations, the foundation will then create a project for the specific task.
We have an extensive database of industry experts which we rely on to work through the safety issues collaboratively.  We always include the race track operators to participate along with marshals, track designers, drivers, etc to get a complete 360 degree analysis of the problem and work as a group on the solution. Once the solution is found, if the funds needed are minimal and the tracks can cover the cost, then we move to the approval by the appropriate sanctioning body depending on the class of racetrack.
If funding is necessary, then we proceed to design a fund raising campaign that will try to capture the generosity of the local community of drivers, marshals, businesses and perhaps larger corporations to raise the funds for the upgrade. Everything we design will always be approved by an unrelated third party.

A.o.O:  What do you say to those who say: motorsport is dangerous, if you don’t like that don’t do it and that too much concern for safety ruins “the show”?

H.C.: When Sean passed away, the most common comment was “well, that’s racing unfortunately”. I think most people say this because the advances in safety have happened in a very steep curve and the technology at the top is amazing and at the bottom is still possibly decades away from catching up.
We are still racing in extremely dangerous environments and the Motorsport Safety Foundation is dedicated to help speed this upgrade process up as much as possible. I definitely do not see most GT tracks reaching Formula 1 safety standards in the next ten years simply because of cost. Most oval tracks will never see the likes of a SAFER barrier like NASCAR any time soon.

I disagree wholeheartedly that safety ruins the show. What makes racing an amazing show is the racing, not the crashes. A close battle between rivals will have you on the edge of your seat for many laps but a crash will last 10 seconds and ruin the next 10 minutes of racing because of the yellow flags. The fact that you replace a 2 row tire barrier with a 4 row or 6 row or an engineered safety barrier will never affect the “show” but it might save the life of the person putting on the show. I even argue that safer tracks lead to better racing and more risk taking by drivers.

A.o.O:   Tell us a bit about your racing plans in 2014.

H.C.:  For 2014, I am personally focused on racing the TUDOR United Sports Car championship in a Porsche GT America with MOMO NGT Motorsport. I also have a 3 driver Porsche Supercup team racing in Europe as the only American entry in Supercup under the name MOMO Megatron.



May 13, 2014

Cayman RS?

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Or GT3  or GT4 or whatever they will call it, would be certainly be sweet.  But with the Cayman GTS at $75000 or so base but really closer to $85K configured to a minimum,  will this be a 100K Cayman?


May 9, 2014

That moment when you realize you just stuffed a Lotus 49 at St.Devote.

11 comments:
Photo: Brando Cairone
A collective "nooooooooo" rose from all in the stands around St. Devote when Chris MacAllister stuffed his immaculate 1967 Lotus 49 into the barriers.   It happened on the first flying lap of practice for the 9th Monaco Historic Grand Prix on Friday.

Tough one for Mac Allister but you might not want to be is a member of his pit crew tonight as it looked to me the front right came off, just before the crash.

This particular car is of enormous historical importance:  it was in this car that the Ford Cosworth DFV engine made its debut, with a win at Zandvoort with Jim Clark.   Clark later drive this chassis to a win at Silverstone as well as in the US and Mexican Grand Prix.

Hopefully there are spares on hand to fix this amazing car before Sunday's race.


May 8, 2014

May 5, 2014

Is Vettel right to complain about F1?

21 comments:


Sebastian Vettel has once again complained 2014's Formula 1 is not to his liking.

Commenting to Germany's Focus Magazine ,  Vettel said he's rather be "taming dragons"  and that he's having trouble finding feeling with his car "which does not know what I want".

His Red Bull teammate Daniel Ricciardo has had no such difficulties coming to terms with the new style F1,  making the 4 time world champion look somewhat ordinary in the first four races of the season.

Of course many fans will agree that fire spitting, loud, sparking F1 cars would be much more spectacular but what you're hearing from Vettel, is that just sour grapes?

After all, he was not complaining so much when he had the blown exhaust cars figured out in the past few years and frankly other than the noise, I don't see a huge difference in the racing despite the radical technology changers.  Except that Seb isn't winning that is.

Thoughts?



May 4, 2014

Nico Rosberg wins the selfie wars.

2 comments:

Selfies while driving Fangio's 1955 Mercedes W196 at Hockenheim? Win.    No word if he will get fined from the FIA for unsafe driving now.

BMW wins DTM season debut at Hockenheim

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Marco Wittmann drove the BWM  M4 DTM to a win in the 2014 season opener in Hickenheim today.   Wittman, who started from P2 on the grid, put a decisive move on Adrien Tambay's Audi at the hairpin during the opening laps and was untouchable for the rest of the race.

Second place went to Mattias Ekström ahead of Tambay in third.     Good day for BMW with six cars in the top ten.   Not a great one for Mercedes with no cars in the top ten but they will have performance weight to help them from the next race.

The opening laps of the race were fun, one great advantage to having fenders is that you can bang them and that's a DTM tradition. Traditional too is the lack of any "eco" hybrid components though DRS is now part of the rules.

DTM does not allow embedding of its race videos but you can go watch the on HERE on YouTube  which should allow you to rewind the "live" event.

1. Marco Wittmann        BMW
2. Mattias Eckström       AUDI
3. Adrien Tambay          AUDI
4. Mike Rockenfeller     AUDI
5. Timo Glock                BMW
6. Bruno Spengler          BMW
7. Martin Tomczyk         BMW
8.Augusto Farfus            BMW
9. Timo Scheider            AUDI
10. Joey Hand                 BMW


May 2, 2014

"I can feel wheels... in my... fingers"

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As our friend Georg Onger said "proper driving and rally Finglish".  

We do wonder what the effect of watching Tommi Mäkinen effortlessly flog this Canadian spec 2015 Subaru WRX STI around Buttonwillow might be on some in Scoobyworld.

"You cannot do any mistakes with this car",  "it really is a car that asks you go faster, go faster"
Clearly a Canadian clip because US lawyers would have been all over that editing room, STAT!

On a tangent, imagine Tommi doing a Christopher Walken imitation...or vice versa?

May 1, 2014

Ayrton Senna's advice for young drivers.

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In the late 1980s Ayrton Senna, was writing occasional columns for Italy's Autosprint magazine.   In one the then Lotus driver has some advice for young racers looking to become professionals.

I don't know if it has ever been translated before,  certainly it is worth reading even if racing has changed much since then.


How to become a professional racing driver
by Ayrton Senna  (originally published in Italian by Autosprint in 1987)

Watching a Grand Prix on television is certainly more entertaining than living it from inside a cockpit of a Formula 1 car.   Despite that, many young people aspire to become racing drivers.   I understand them completely, I was like them once...
Those interested in sport at a professional level should consider other disciplines as well, tennis for example, that are more personal, less dangerous and equally gratifying.   Those who play tennis have only themselves to rely on, those who race in Formula 1 have to contend with many external factors, like the car.


In any case, racing cars can be very rewarding if you have a passion for speed but racing as a hobby is always more fun than having it be your profession.
I started racing professionally in 1981, my first year in Formula Ford in the UK.
Before that I raced karts for fun even though I approached it with a passion that seemed professional.     It's not easy to give advice to those who would like to become professional racing drivers. One should examine each on a case by case basis.  However there are some suggestions that, in my opinion, can be valid for all.

First:  start with karting.
This is the best way to get into the world of racing from both a technical and an economic point of view.
I don't think it's necessary to point out how much you an learn racing karts, it's been said a million times.  Those who are fast in karts have what it takes to go fast in a single seater.   That much is a given but it does not mean that you are then ready to become a professional.
Being fast is not enough:  to become a professional driver you need to find emotional stability, to choose the right team and finally to know how to mind your public relations.

Second: Understand if you are suited to this profession.
In the beginning, racing can be something fun and joyous.  Then you might realize that to progress you need to dedicate yourself 100%.  Not everyone is willing to dedicate days and nights to racing, forgoing the company of friends, going to the pub or to clubs.   It's important to feel that what you are doing comes naturally, that it feels fun and, especially, easy and not just the driving part.   If that's not the case, it's best to quit immediately, or continue as a hobby,  because going forward, difficulties and problems will only increase.

Third:  race in the right place.  
In 1981 I moved to England to race Formula Ford.  For me it was inevitable while for those who live in France or Italy, as an example, might be able to race in their very valid promotional series in their own countries.  
But if you wish to become a Formula 1 driver you must race in England.   It's there where almost all the teams are and you have to race with the right mindset even in the lower series.  I'm not referring to the technical aspects of those series but that when you race in Englang you have to learn how to express yourself in English and to live with the British.  You become accustomed to being the foreigner racing in front of a British public who is cheering for local drivers.   You also have to commit to a big psychological jump: abandoning friends  and habits to think only of racing.  This is crucial and I recommend packing your bag an moving somewhere else to race.

Fourth:  Don't make mistakes.
If you want to get to Formula 1, there is a rapid and well defined route to follow:  Formula Ford 1600, Formula Ford 2000 and Formula 3.  The driver who can navigate this three year path correctly,  that is winning everything, has a very good chance to be in F1 by the fourth year.




Peter Windsor trots out bizarre Senna theory

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Peter Windsor picked a weird day to trot out the bizarre and discredited theory that holding his breath caused Senna to momentarily black out and crash.

Aside from telemetry that showed both steering inputs and braking, why choose this of all dates to blame the one guy who's not here?   Wasn't blaming everything else on "the Italians" enough? I don't get it.

You can see the rest of the clips here

L'aerodinamica

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More videos from the laFerrari press drives are coming out.  Some factory provided  aero and dorifto porn b-roll here...



And laFerrari left AUTOCAR's  Steve Sutcliffe a bit speechless at times.

Legacy.

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Williams/LAT


We much prefer to celebrate birthdays rather than remember deaths.  The ultimate legacy of Senna's death  was a new attitude towards safety, an attitude which finally refuted the lingering notion that driver safety was secondary.  

Formula One has done a lot homework but there is still so much to do elsewhere. This is especially true when it comes to circuit safety, the losses of Allan Simonsen and Sean Edwards come to mind.  
As a tribute on this day, we would encourage all who race or participate in the sport to join the Motorsport Safety Foundation, a forum for discussions about any possible improvements.  

I think Ayrton would have liked that.

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